Today’s question asks about ways that we should think about our disagreements in the Church.
Category: Questions and Answers
What’s the Deal With the Weird Healing Pool in John 5?
What’s going on in John 5 with the pool at Bethsaida? Was there a magical healing pool? Does Jesus sanction this healing method? If Jesus didn’t sanction this pool, why doesn’t he condemn it?
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My Library and Reading Habits
Today I respond to a questioner asking for a tour of my bookshelves. You don’t get the tour (sorry!), but I do share a bit about my library and reading habits.
Paul Maxwell on Masculinity
Today, I am giving some thoughts about Paul Maxwell’s work on masculinity, summarized here.
More on Two Kingdoms
In today’s video, I address some questions that were raised in response to my previous video.
Echoes of the Eucharist?
What would be a text that you would go to demonstrate the multifaceted elements of the Eucharist? Can you recommend any books or resources that explore the many symbolic and typological elements of the Eucharist, much like your book on Echoes of the Exodus? Perhaps an echoes of the Eucharist?
Does Baptism Save Us?
In Q&A#46, you seem to say that baptism (with water) is necessary for salvation. Am I interpreting your perspective correctly, and if so, what do you think about the man on the cross next to Jesus going to heaven without baptism?
My Ten Most Stimulating Bible-Related Books
What are the ten most stimulating Bible-related books that you have read?
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Is Abortion to be Solved by Controlling Male Sexual Behaviour?
This video is a response to a widely-shared, much discussed, and controversial Twitter thread. Within the discussion, I reference a few articles and books:
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Appeals to Natural Law and Scripture and the Effectiveness of Jordan Peterson
I guess I’m intrigued about a couple of things.
First, do you really think it’s the case that there is actually any kind of moral consensus in principle among people? The kind of thing that lets pro-Natural Law folk say, “Everyone knows that murder is wrong” when, actually, a glance at our history raises at least some questions about this.
I guess this is prompted in part by the fact that what passes for sexual ethics in the public square is now moving so fast that even I feel old-fashioned, and (more to the point) I can remember a day not so long ago when “Everyone would have thought” that things now accepted as normal would have been described as abhorrent and unnatural.
Doesn’t this ethical slide raise at least some questions about the stability of any kind of NL ethic?
And second, a question from the other side of the coin. Shouldn’t Jordan Peterson’s remarkable success in making arguments in the public square in part on the basis of an unashamed appeal to the Christian Scriptures give us rather greater optimism that some seem to have about the credibility of making such an appeal to people who aren’t themselves Bible-believing Christians?
Might it not be possible to make a kind of (presuppositionally?) self-validating appeal to an unacknowledged source of religious authority like the Bible, in a way that doesn’t rely on a prior commitment to its authority, but rather generates precisely that commitment by the cogency of the appeal and the argument as a whole?”
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